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Maryland State Government Maryland Department of the Environment

Biological Stressor Identification Studies

picture of channelization of streamBiological impairments impact aquatic communities; therefore, the biological assemblages (e.g., fish, aquatic insects, algae, periphyton) residing in these communities can be used to assess stream conditions and serve as indicators of good or poor water quality. One common measure of biological integrity is an Index of Biotic Integrity (IBI).  An IBI assesses biological integrity by comparing the community structure of biological assemblages in a particular stream to that of a high quality (or reference) stream. 

In 2002, Maryland began listing waterbodies as impaired for impacts to biological communities in its Integrated Report of Surface Water Quality (IR).  A biological impairment is the detrimental effect on the biological integrity of a waterbody caused by an impact, anthropogenic and/or natural, that prevents attainment of the State’s non-tidal water quality standards protecting and supporting the capability of self-sustaining aquatic life.

For each watershed listed as impaired on the IR, the State is to either establish a Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) of the specified substance that the waterbody can receive without violating water quality standards, or demonstrate via a Water Quality Analysis (WQA) that water quality standards are being met. 

The current methodology used to list watersheds as biologically impaired on the IR uses benthic macroinvertebrate and fish IBIs to indicate that a biological impairment has occurred; however, it does not definitively determine the stressor causing the biological impairment. The MDE Science Services Administration has developed a Biological Stressor Identification (BSID) analysis that uses a case control, risk-based approach to systematically and objectively determine the predominant causes and sources of degraded biological conditions in impaired watersheds. 

The BSID analysis uses the MDDNR MBSS Round 2 dataset to evaluate habitat, sediment, water chemistry and source parameters in order to determine the potential stressors and anthropogenic sources impacting biological communities in impaired watersheds.  Maryland’s BSID analyzes three key groups of stressors: water chemistry, instream and riparian habitat and sediment/flow related; as well as five groups of land use sources:  urban, agricultural, barren, anthropogenic and acidic (e.g., acid mine drainage, atmospheric deposition). 

The table below lists BSID studies for impaired watersheds.  For more information on the methodology used to identify biological impairments in the IR, click here. For more information about the stressor identification methodology, please click here. For more information on TMDLs, click here.  For the draft schedule of report completion, click here.

 

BSID Report
Basin Name

DNR 8-digit Basin Number

TMDL/WQA Available

Anacostia River 02140205 Sediment 
Back River 02130901  
Bynum Run 02130704 Sediment 
Cabin John Creek 02140207

Phosphorus

Sediment

Catoctin Creek 02140305  
Deep Creek Lake 05020203 Phosphorus
Double Pipe Creek 02140304 Sediment 
Evitts Creek 02141002 Phosphorus
Gwynns Falls 02130905

Phosphorus

Jones Falls 02130904 Phosphorus
Liberty Reservoir 02130907   
Little Patuxent River 02131105 Phosphorus
Lower Choptank River 02130403   
Lower Gunpowder River 02130802  
Lower Monocacy River 02140302 Sediment 
Lower North Branch of the Patapsco River 02130906  
Marshyhope Creek 02130306  
Patuxent River Upper 02131104 Sediment 
Potomac River, Montgomery County 02140202

Sediment

Nutrients (WQA) 

Potomac River, Upper North Branch 02141005 Low pH 
Potomac River, Washington County 02140501

Sediment

Nutrients (WQA) 

Rock Creek 02140206 Sediment 

Seneca Creek

02140208

Phosphorus

Sediment

Transquaking River 02130308  
Upper Chester River 02130510  
Upper Choptank River 02130404  
Upper Pocomoke River 02130203  
West River 02131004  
Wills Creek 02141003

Phosphorus

Sediment

 

Other Related Links

United States Environmental Protection Agency Links


Maryland Department of the Environment Links

 

Maryland Department of Natural Resources Links

 

Contact Information

Please direct questions or comments concerning Maryland's Biological Stressor Identification Studies  to Allison O'Hanlon at (410) 537-3902.


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